1 / 35

What’s Blowing in the Wind?

Tuberculosis and Long Term Care. Ruth Anne Appl RN BScN TB Control Saskatchewan. What’s Blowing in the Wind?. Broadcast live from the 2012 CHICA-Canada Conference. June 18, 2012. www.webbertraining.com. Objectives. Provide an overview of tuberculosis Describe risk factors and presentation

quana
Download Presentation

What’s Blowing in the Wind?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tuberculosis and Long Term Care Ruth Anne Appl RN BScNTB Control Saskatchewan What’s Blowing in the Wind? Broadcast live from the 2012 CHICA-Canada Conference June 18, 2012 www.webbertraining.com

  2. Objectives • Provide an overview of tuberculosis • Describe risk factors and presentation • Describe screening practices • Describe management of tuberculosis • Present a case study from long term care

  3. What's the Concern about TB in Long Term Care/Chronic Care Facilities? • Large number of residents live in close environment – frequent and prolonged contact • Residents may be more susceptible due to advancing age and/or impaired immune function

  4. What is Tuberculosis? • TB is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis • Airborne transmission by droplet nuclei from forceful expiration - coughing , sneezing, shouting • Nuclei can remain suspended in the air for several hours

  5. Pathophysiology • Bacilli enter the alveoli and are engulfed by macrophages • Bacilli transported to hilar lymph nodes • CD4 T-helper lymphocytes are recruited Picture adapted from: http://www.nature.com/ni/journal/v5/n8/fig_tab/ni0804-778_F1.html & http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a2/Lungs.gif

  6. Granuloma Formation A complex immune response is triggered leading to the development of granulomas CD4 T-helper cell lymphocytes B-cell lymphocytes Macrophage Macrophage with TB Dendritic cell Picture adapted from: http://www.nature.com/ni/journal/v5/n8/fig_tab/ni0804-778_F1.html

  7. Active Disease vs Latent TB Infection • If the immune system is healthy and the granulomas can contain the bacteria (remain dormant), this results in Latent TB Infection (LTBI) • If the granuloma cannot contain the bacteria, they escape, replicate and spread occurs leading to active disease

  8. Active Disease vs Latent TB Infection • 10% lifetime risk of disease in individuals with a healthy immune system • 5% - primary disease < 2 years • 5% - post primary disease > 2years

  9. Estimated TB Incidence Rates 2010 WHO Report 2011 Global Tuberculosis Control

  10. TB Cases Saskatchewan and Canada 2010

  11. Incidence of Active Disease in Canada 2010

  12. TB Cases by Age Canada 2010

  13. Risk Factors for the Development of Active TB among Persons with LTBI • Canadian Tuberculosis Standards 6th Edition identifies three categories of risk • High • Increased • Low

  14. High Risk

  15. Increased Risk

  16. Low Risk

  17. Determinants of Transmission of Disease • Susceptibility of those exposed • Contagiousness of the patient • Infectivity of the strain • Extent of exposure – duration, frequency, intensity • Environment – air circulation, ventilation, proximity to the source

  18. Preventing Transmission in Long Term Care • Residents • Baseline chest x-ray on acceptance into LTC • Baseline two-step Tuberculin Skin Test not warranted unless the population the institution serves is at high risk i.e. from high incidence country or high incidence aboriginal community, former urban poor, HIV positive

  19. Residents continued • Annual or serial TST not necessary • Assessment for history of TB treatment or contact

  20. Preventing Transmission in Long Term Care • Health Care Workers and Volunteers • TB infection control policies in place • Two-step TST at time of hire if TST negative or status unknown • Annual screening depends on the occurrence of TST conversion - can be discontinued if conversion rate < 0.5%

  21. Health Care Workers and Volunteers continued • N95 Respirator masks • Education of staff • Report any symptoms suggesting TB

  22. Clinical Presentation of Active Disease • Cough – persistent, unremitting, ≥ 3 weeks duration, • Fever ≥ 7 days • Pneumonia unresponsive to antibiotics • Symptoms of hemoptysis, night sweats, weight loss, anorexia, fatigue are seen in more advanced stages of disease • Extra-pulmonary symptoms • Presentation may be masked by existing co-morbid conditions

  23. Management of Reactivated LTBI • Referral to TB Control program • Transfer infectious cases to negative pressure isolation room • Investigations – specimens, x-ray • Symptom inquiry, physical assessment • Chemotherapy by Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) or Directly Observed Prophylaxis (DOP) • Contact Trace to determine spread

  24. Case Study Presentation • Gentleman in late 70’s admitted to hospital with decreased LOC, possible sepsis, possible GI Bleed (HgB 89), fever, and probable aspiration pneumonia • Several underlying health issues including COPD and dementia • Had been in 2 LTC facilities in the previous 14 months

  25. Too ill to give history, no family and limited documentation • Started on antibiotics for aspiration pneumonia • ID saw and requested sputums for AFB • Placed in negative pressure isolation • Chest X-Ray – Bilateral airspace changes, consolidation RUL, right hilar mass

  26. Chest x-ray 3 years previously - no evidence of disease • 1 year prior to this admission TST of 25 mm and chest x-ray showed RUL volume loss with airspace changes and pleural thickening. No documentation that sputums sent for AFB • CT scan 3 days post admission showed dense consolidation RUL with a cavitating mass RUL and pleural thickening

  27. Sputum results 1st - smear negative (5 days) 2nd - 6 AFB in cords (7 days) 3rd - 3+ (12 days) • TB Control consulted, TB meds started • Patient’s condition worsened he expired 2 weeks later

  28. Contact Trace • Trace yielded 131 contacts - Residents - 20 - Staff - 111 • TST status - Negatives - 69 - Positives - 50 - Unknown - 12

  29. Contacts by Age Group

  30. Outcomes • TST Conversions -12 11 were seen in clinic 1 did not attend • Prophylaxis - 1 • Active cases - 0 • No children were part of the contact trace

  31. Location of Contacts

  32. References Long, R. & Ellis, E. (Ed.). (2007). Canadian Tuberculosis Standards, 6th edition. Public Health Agency of Canada and the Canadian Lung Association/Canadian Thoracic Society. Public Health Agency of Canada. Tuberculosis in Canada 2010 - Pre-release . Retrieved from http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/tbpc-latb/pubs/tbcan10pre/index-eng.php Schaaf, H. S. & Zumla, A. (Ed.). (2009). Tuberculosis: A Comprehensive Clinical Reference. Europe: Elsevier. Todd, I. & Spickett, G. (2010). Lecture Notes: Immunology, 6th edition. West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. West, J. G. (2005). Respiratory Physiology: The Essentials, 7th edition. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. World Health Organization. WHO Report 2011: Global Tuberculosis Control. Retrieved from: whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2011/9789241564380_eng.pdf

  33. QUESTIONS?

  34. www.chica.org

  35. 11 July (Free WHO Teleclass … Europe) Patient Involvement in Infection Control – What Does it Mean and How Can We Support It? Speaker: Claire Kilpatrick, World Health Organisation Sponsored by WHO First Global Patient Safety Challenge – Clean Care is Safer Care 19 July (Free Teleclass) Top 10 Must-Do’s for the Elimination of Hospital- Associated Infections Speaker: Dr. William Jarvis, Jason and Jarvis Associates Teleclass sponsored by GOJO (www.gojo.com) 26 July (Free Teleclass) Pneumonia Prevention – The Vent and Beyond Speaker: Kathleen M. Vollman, Advancing Nursing LLC Teleclass sponsored by Sage Products Inc (www.sageproducts.com)8 August (Free WHO Teleclass … Europe) Processing Medical Devices in Settings With Limited Resources Speaker: Dr. Nizam Damani, Craigavon Area Hospital, Northern Ireland

More Related